95-8605. Financial Assurance Effective Date for Owners and Operators of Municipal Solid Waste Landfill Facilities  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 67 (Friday, April 7, 1995)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 17649-17652]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-8605]
    
    
    
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    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    
    40 CFR Part 258
    
    [FRL-5186-1]
    RIN 2050-AE27
    
    
    Financial Assurance Effective Date for Owners and Operators of 
    Municipal Solid Waste Landfill Facilities
    
    AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency [EPA].
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency is amending the criteria 
    for Municipal Solid Waste Landfills (MSWLFs) under subtitle D of the 
    Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), 42 U.S.C. 6921 et seq., 
    by delaying the effective date of the Financial Assurance Criteria set 
    out at 40 CFR part 258, subpart G, until April 9, 1997. The extension 
    applies to any size MSWLF, including remote, very small landfills as 
    defined at 40 CFR 258.1(f)(1), and delays the compliance date for 
    MSWLFs by two years, from April 9, 1995 until April 9, 1997 (for 
    remote, very small landfills by 18 months, from October 9, 1995 until 
    April 9, 1997).
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: The amendments in this final rule are effective March 
    31, 1995. The effective date of subpart G of part 258 (Secs. 258.70 
    through 258.74) which was added at 56 FR 51016 is delayed until April 
    9, 1997.
    
    ADDRESSES: The docket for this rulemaking is available for public 
    inspection at Room M-2616, U.S. EPA, 401 M Street SW., Washington, DC 
    20460 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding holidays. 
    The docket number is F-95-FADF-FFFFF. Call (202) 260-9327 to make an 
    appointment with the docket clerk. As provided in 40 CFR Part 2, a 
    reasonable fee may be charged for copying services.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: The RCRA Hotline toll free at (800) 
    424-9346 or in Washington, D.C. at (703) 412-9810, from 8:30 a.m. to 
    7:30 p.m. EST, Monday through Friday, excluding holidays; or Nancy 
    Hunt, Office of Solid Waste (5303W), U.S. Environmental Protection 
    Agency, 401 M Street SW, Washington, DC 20460 at (703) 308-8762.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Preamble Outline
    
    I. Authority.
    II. Background.
    III. Response to Comments and Analysis of Issues.
        A. Support for Extension.
        B. Opposition to Extension.
        C. Local Governments.
        D. Remote/Very Small Landfills.
        E. Unfunded Mandate.
    IV. Effective Date.
    V. Economic and Regulatory Impacts.
        A. Executive Order 12866.
        B. Regulatory Flexibility Act.
        C. Paperwork Reduction Act.
    
    I. Authority
    
        These amendments to Title 40, part 258, of the Code of Federal 
    Regulations are promulgated under the authority of sections 1008(a)(3), 
    2002(a), 4004(a), and 4010(c) of the Resource Conservation and Recovery 
    Act (RCRA), as amended, 42 U.S.C. 6907(a)(3), 6912(a), 6944(a), and 
    6949a(c).
    
    II. Background
    
        The Agency proposed revised criteria for municipal solid waste 
    landfills (MSWLFs), including financial assurance requirements, on 
    August 30, 1988 (see 53 FR 33314). The purpose of the financial 
    assurance requirements is to assure that adequate funds will be readily 
    available to cover the costs of closure, post-closure care, and 
    corrective action associated with MSWLFs.
        In the August 30, 1988 proposal, rather than proposing specific 
    financial assurance mechanisms, the Agency proposed a financial 
    assurance performance standard. The Agency solicited public comment on 
    this performance standard approach and, at the same time, requested 
    comment on whether the Agency should develop financial test mechanisms 
    for use by local governments and corporations.
        In response to comment, the Agency promulgated several specific 
    financial mechanisms in the October 9, 1991 final rule on MSWLF 
    criteria (56 FR 50978), in addition to the financial assurance 
    performance standard of section 258.74, which allows approved States to 
    use any State-approved mechanism that meets that performance standard. 
    Commenters on the August 30, 1988 proposal also supported the 
    development of financial tests for local governments and for 
    corporations to demonstrate that they can satisfy the goals of 
    financial assurance on their own, without the need to produce a third-
    party instrument to assure that the obligations associated with their 
    landfill will be met. The Agency agreed with commenters and in the 
    October 9, 1991 preamble, announced its intention to develop both a 
    local government and corporate financial test in advance of the 
    effective date of the financial assurance provisions.
        The Agency has delayed the effective date of the financial 
    responsibility provisions until April 9, 1995 (see 58 FR 51536) in 
    order to provide adequate time to promulgate a financial test for local 
    governments and another for corporations before the effective date of 
    the financial assurance provisions. The delayed effective date also was 
    intended to provide owners and operators sufficient time to determine 
    whether they satisfy the applicable financial test criteria for all of 
    the obligations associated with their facilities, and to obtain a 
    guarantor or an alternate instrument, if necessary. The Agency also 
    recognized that local governments, in particular, require notice of the 
    requirements in order to plan their budgets for the upcoming year.
        The Agency proposed a local government financial test and a 
    corporate financial test on December 27, 1993 (see 58 FR 68353) and 
    October 12, [[Page 17650]] 1994 (see 59 FR 51523), respectively. The 
    Agency expects to promulgate the local government test in the fall of 
    1995 and the corporate test in the spring of 1996. The Agency, 
    therefore, proposed an additional extension on October 18, 1994 to 
    delay the current April 9, 1995 effective date for subtitle D financial 
    assurance requirements by one year until April 9, 1996 (see 59 FR 
    52498) to allow MSWLF owners and operators that qualify to demonstrate 
    financial assurance for their closure, post-closure, and corrective 
    action obligations through the use of a financial test. Owners and 
    operators who meet the requirements of the financial tests will not be 
    required to obtain a third-party financial assurance instrument1 
    for these obligations.
    
        \1\For a description of the third-party instruments available to 
    MSWLF owners and operators see 56 FR 50978.
    III. Response to Comments and Analysis of Issues
    
        This section summarizes and addresses the major comments out of a 
    total of 139 comments received on the October 18, 1994 proposal. A 
    discussion of, and response to, all comments can be found in the docket 
    for this rulemaking.
    
    A. Support for Extension
    
        Most commenters support the proposal to extend the effective date 
    of the financial assurance requirements. Many commenters, however, 
    expressed concern that the proposed one-year extension until April 9, 
    1996 would not be enough time for MSWLF owners and operators to meet 
    the financial assurance requirements by using the local government and 
    corporate financial tests. Not only have the financial tests not been 
    promulgated yet, but States will need time to incorporate the financial 
    tests into their regulations and MSWLF owners and operators will then 
    need time to comply with the recordkeeping and reporting requirements 
    of the financial test (or with the requirements of an alternate 
    financial assurance instrument).
        The Agency agrees that one year may not be enough time to take 
    advantage of a financial test and, accordingly, has decided to extend 
    the effective date of the financial assurance requirements for MSWLF 
    owners and operators by two years from April 9, 1995 until April 9, 
    1997 (for landfill owners and operators of remote, very small landfills 
    by 18 months, from October 9, 1995 until April 9, 1997). Although the 
    Agency would like to implement the financial assurance requirements as 
    soon as possible, the Agency must also balance the goals of ensuring 
    protection of human health and the environment and minimizing the costs 
    of regulatory compliance to owners and operators of MSWLFs. The Agency 
    believes that the potential cost savings to MSWLF owners and operators 
    of complying with financial assurance requirements through the use of a 
    financial test outweigh the risks of delaying their implementation. The 
    Agency does not believe that delaying the effective date of the 
    financial assurance requirements by a temporary extension will result 
    in a significant threat to human health and the environment. The 
    purpose of the financial assurance requirements is to ensure that funds 
    will be available to cover the costs of closure and post-closure care 
    if the owner or operator is unable to cover these costs when they 
    occur. The delay in implementing the financial assurance requirements, 
    however, does not in any way affect the owner or operator's existing 
    obligation to conduct closure and post-closure care at the facility 
    when required in a manner consistent with the Subtitle D criteria, and 
    to pay the costs incurred in conducting those activities. Like other 
    future business expenses, the Agency anticipates that most owners and 
    operators have prepared or are currently preparing to meet these 
    expenses. Thus, it is unlikely that a delay in implementing the 
    financial responsibility requirements will result in significant 
    numbers of unfunded closure and post-closure care activities.
        The Agency believes that the two-year extension adopted in this 
    rule can be fairly characterized as the logical outgrowth of the 
    October 18, 1994 proposal. Although the proposed rule contemplated a 
    one-year extension, the point was to provide notice of the need for 
    additional time for MSWLF owners and operators to meet the financial 
    assurance requirements through the use of a financial test. In light of 
    the comments received, the Agency is now persuaded that a two-year, not 
    a one-year, extension is necessary for MSWLF owners and operators to 
    meet the financial assurance requirements through the use of a 
    financial test.
    
    B. Opposition to Extension
    
        Four commenters out of a total of 139 commenters oppose extending 
    the time for MSWLFs to comply with financial assurance requirements.
        One commenter argues that MSWLF owners and operators could comply 
    at this time using currently available financial assurance mechanisms, 
    such as a trust fund, letter of credit or surety bond, and that an 
    extension would only serve to delay closure of MSWLFs that could not 
    meet financial assurance requirements. A related comment argues that 
    repeated delays undermine the credibility of the financial assurance 
    program; that the use of a trust fund is preferable to a financial 
    test; and that any additional delay in implementing the financial 
    assurance requirements for local governments should be no more than 
    eight months after the April 1995 effective date.
        Although many MSWLF owners and operators could comply with 
    financial assurance requirements using currently available 
    alternatives, the Agency is committed to developing a local government 
    and corporate financial test as an alternative to third party financial 
    mechanisms for the reasons discussed above. The Agency, therefore, 
    believes that MSWLF owners and operators should not have to select a 
    financial assurance mechanism until all the financial assurance 
    alternatives are available, including the financial tests, so that 
    MSWLF owners and operators can assess all the alternatives to determine 
    which one will best serve their needs.
        The Agency disagrees that delaying the effective date will only 
    serve to delay closure of facilities than cannot meet the financial 
    assurance criteria. MSWLFs are already subject to design and operating 
    requirements that are more extensive, and significantly more expensive, 
    than the financial assurance criteria. MSWLFs that were unable to meet 
    Federal minimum design and operating requirements have already closed.
        The State of Missouri argues that a delay in implementing Federal 
    financial assurance requirements would place MSWLF owners and operators 
    in States that already require financial assurance at a competitive 
    disadvantage with MSWLF owners and operators in States that do not 
    currently require financial assurance, as well as place States with 
    existing or planned financial assurance programs in the position of 
    having to spend valuable time and effort to delay their own programs.
        The Agency does not believe that an additional two years to comply 
    with Federal financial assurance requirements would create a 
    competitive disadvantage between MSWLF owners and operators in States 
    with different financial assurance requirements. The available evidence 
    suggests that the costs of transporting waste--even between adjacent 
    States--will more than offset the additional costs of disposing of 
    waste in a State with financial assurance requirements. Further, since 
    waste disposal contracts are generally written to cover several 
    [[Page 17651]] years, the Agency believes it is unlikely waste 
    generators will shift disposal to a different MSWLF during a temporary 
    extension period.
        Furthermore, in the absence of a significant competitive 
    disadvantage among States as a result of the delay there is, arguably, 
    no need for States with existing or planned financial assurance 
    programs to change their own requirements. States can adopt 
    requirements under State law that are more stringent than the Federal 
    requirements and, therefore, do not need to delay implementing their 
    own financial assurance requirements. Indeed, States that adopt 
    responsible financial assurance requirements over the next two years 
    will be better able to cover unanticipated MSWLF closure or post-
    closure costs. If, however, a State chose to delay its own financial 
    assurance requirements, the commenter has not shown that it would be 
    prohibitively expensive or difficult to implement such an extension.
        A commenter from the insurance and surety industry argues that 
    delaying the effective date of the financial assurance requirements to 
    allow the use of a financial test would ultimately undermine the 
    purpose of the financial assurance requirements and force States to 
    incur the costs of closing, and remediating releases from, MSWLFs that 
    cannot meet financial assurance requirements. The argument is that the 
    use of a financial test would mean that only the least financially able 
    MSWLF owners and operators would purchase third-party financial 
    assurance instruments, which would discourage the continued development 
    of alternate financial assurance instruments in the insurance and 
    surety industry, thereby, making it more expensive and more difficult 
    to obtain third-party financial assurance instruments. Financially 
    weaker MSWLF owners and operators would, therefore, be unable to meet 
    financial assurance requirements and would seek to further reduce the 
    requirements necessary to meet a financial test. Inevitably, States 
    would be burdened with the closure and response costs of financially 
    weak MSWLF owners and operators that are either unable to obtain third-
    party financial assurance instruments or that are allowed to continue 
    to operate as a result of a devalued financial test.
        This comment is more appropriately addressed to the proposed 
    financial tests themselves, rather than to a delay in implementing the 
    financial assurance requirements. At this time it is difficult, if not 
    impossible, to predict how many MSWLFs will or will not be able to meet 
    a financial test, because the local government and corporate financial 
    tests have not yet been promulgated or otherwise finalized. 
    Accordingly, the Agency will address this issue more fully in the 
    financial test rulemakings. Even if, however, insurance and surety 
    mechanisms become expensive and difficult to obtain due to underwriting 
    considerations, owners and operators still have the option of obtaining 
    a guarantee, a letter of credit, or of establishing a trust fund to 
    comply with financial assurance obligations. Trust funds, in 
    particular, are available to all owners and operators regardless of 
    corporate affiliation or prevailing market conditions, because creating 
    a trust fund does not present a financial risk.
        In any event, the Agency does not believe that a temporary delay in 
    implementing the Subtitle D financial assurance requirements in 
    anticipation of the development of a financial test will cause 
    financial services firms to abandon the market for, or otherwise limit 
    their development of, third-party financial assurance instruments. 
    First, it is the Agency's understanding that providers of financial 
    assurance mechanisms make decisions regarding potential markets and the 
    desirability of entering those markets based on evaluations of long-
    term market demand; arguably, a two-year delay should not have a 
    significant effect on this long term decision-making. Second, an 
    extensive market for financial assurance mechanisms, which is 
    sufficient to maintain the infrastructure of the market for such 
    mechanisms, already exists independent of the RCRA Subtitle D financial 
    assurance requirements. For example, owners and operators of hazardous 
    waste treatment, storage and disposal facilities (TSDFs), underground 
    storage tanks, and PCB commercial storage facilities must meet 
    financial assurance requirements, which include third-party mechanisms 
    that are essentially the same as those provided for in the Subtitle D 
    criteria.
    
    C. Local Governments
    
        Some commenters argue that local governments as a class should be 
    exempt from meeting financial assurance requirements for MSWLFs, 
    because unlike private MSWLFs owners and operators, local governments 
    do not go out of business or otherwise disappear. Today's rule and the 
    October 18, 1994 proposal, however, only address the issue of extending 
    the effective date for meeting the financial assurance requirements for 
    MSWLFs; they do not raise the issue of whether certain classes of MSWLF 
    owners and operators, such as local governments, should be exempt from 
    the financial assurance requirements. The Agency previously addressed 
    this issue in the October 9, 1991 rule that revised the minimum Federal 
    standards, including financial assurance criteria, for MSWLFs (see 56 
    FR 50978). At that time, the Agency determined that local governments 
    should not be exempt from financial assurance requirements because 
    local governments may be unable to obtain the immediate funds necessary 
    to meet closure and/or corrective action obligations at MSWLFs so as to 
    ensure protection of human health and the environment. Local 
    governments, for example, often have relatively limited resources, 
    limited flexibility in their annual budgets and a limited ability to 
    quickly obtain traditional sources of financing or revenues, such as 
    bond issues, taxes and intergovernmental transfers.
    D. Remote/Very Small Landfills
    
        Today's rule extends the effective date of the financial assurance 
    requirements for all MSWLF owners and operators, including remote, very 
    small (less than 20 tons per day) landfills as defined at 40 CFR 
    Sec. 258.1(f)(1), until April 9, 1997. Although the proposed rule 
    contemplated extending the effective date of the financial assurance 
    requirements for all MSWLFs, this was apparently unclear to several 
    commenters who suggested that the Agency extend the deadline for the 
    remote, very small landfills as well as for the general class of 
    MSWLFs. Remote/very-small landfills had been subject to different 
    deadlines for meeting the MSWLF criteria than the general class of 
    MSWLFs; until today's rule the effective date of the financial 
    assurance requirements for owners and operators of remote, very small 
    landfills was October 9, 1995 (see 58 FR 51536).
    
    E. Unfunded Mandate
    
        A few commenters assert that the financial assurance requirements 
    contained in the October 9, 1991 final rule on MSWLF Criteria (56 FR 
    50978) constitute a Federal unfunded mandate on local governments. 
    Today's rule, however, provides regulatory relief by extending for two 
    years the effective date by which MSWLF owners and operators (including 
    local government owners and operators) must meet those financial 
    assurance requirements. Moreover, the purpose of the extension provided 
    by this rule is to allow the Agency sufficient time to promulgate a 
    rule to give MSWLF owners and operators additional flexibility to meet 
    the financial assurance requirements. That rule will allow owners and 
    [[Page 17652]] operators to use a financial test instead of a more 
    expensive third-party instrument to assure that adequate funds will be 
    readily available to cover the costs of closure, post-closure care, and 
    corrective action associated with MSWLFs.
    
    IV. Effective Date
    
        Today's rule is effective immediately. Section 3010(b) of RCRA 
    provides that regulations respecting requirements applicable to the 
    treatment, storage, or disposal of hazardous waste shall take effect 
    six months after the date of promulgation. However, section 3010(b)(1) 
    of RCRA allows the Agency to set a shorter effective date if the Agency 
    finds that the regulated community does not need six months to come 
    into compliance with the new regulation.
        The regulated community does not need six months to come into 
    compliance with today's rule, because the provisions of this rule 
    delays the regulatory requirements of financial responsibility and 
    allows the Agency time to develop additional, more flexible, methods 
    for MSWLF owners and operators to comply with the regulations. Today's 
    rule, therefore, is immediately effective under section 553(d) of the 
    Administrative Procedure Act.
    
    V. Economic and Regulatory Impacts
    
    A. Executive Order 12866
    
        Under Executive Order 12866, which was published in the Federal 
    Register on October 4, 1993 (see 58 FR 51735), the Agency must 
    determine whether a regulatory action is ``significant'' and, 
    therefore, subject to OMB review and the requirements of the Executive 
    Order. The Order defines ``significant regulatory action'' as one that 
    is likely to result in a rule that may:
        (1) Have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more, 
    or adversely affect in a material way the economy, a sector of the 
    economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public 
    health or safety, or State, local, or Tribal governments or 
    communities;
        (2) Create a serious inconsistency or otherwise interfere with an 
    action taken or planned by another agency;
        (3) Materially alter the budgetary impact of entitlement, grants, 
    user fees, or loan programs or the rights and obligations of recipients 
    thereof; or
        (4) Raise novel legal or policy issues arising out of legal 
    mandates, the President's priorities, or the principles set forth in 
    the Executive Order.
        The Agency believes that this final rule does not meet the 
    definition of a major regulation. Thus, the Agency is not conducting a 
    Regulatory Impact Analysis, and today's final rule is not subject to 
    review by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) based upon 
    Executive Order 12886.
    
    B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act [5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.] at the 
    time an Agency publishes a proposed or final rule, it generally must 
    prepare a Regulatory Flexibility Analysis that describes the impact of 
    the rule on small entities (i.e., small businesses, small 
    organizations, and small governmental jurisdictions), unless the 
    Administrator certifies that the rule will not have a significant 
    economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. The effect 
    of this final rule is to provide small entities with additional time to 
    meet the financial assurance requirements of subtitle D regarding 
    closure and post-closure costs. Therefore, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605b, 
    the Agency believes that this final rule will not have a significant 
    impact on a substantial number of small entities.
    
    C. Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        The Agency has determined that there are no new reporting, 
    notification, or recordkeeping provisions associated with today's final 
    rule.
    
    List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 258
    
        Environmental protection, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, 
    Waste treatment and disposal.
    
        Dated: March 31, 1995.
    
    Carol M. Browner,
    
    Administrator.
    
        For the reasons set out in the preamble, title 40 chapter I, of the 
    Code of Federal Regulations is amended as follows:
    
    PART 258--CRITERIA FOR MUNICIPAL SOLID WASTE LANDFILLS
    
        1. The authority citation for part 258 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 6907(a)(3), 6912(a), 6944(a), and 6949a(c); 
    33 U.S.C. 1345(d) and 1345(e).
    
        2. Sec. 258.70 is amended by revising paragraph (b) to read as 
    follows:
    
    Sec. 258.70  Applicability and effective date.
    
    * * * * *
    
        (b) The requirements of this section are effective April 9, 1997.
    
        3. Sec. 258.74 is amended by revising paragraph (a)(5) to read as 
    follows:
    
    Sec. 258.74  Allowable mechanisms.
    
    * * * * *
    
        (a) * * *
    
        (5) The initial payment into the trust fund must be made before the 
    initial receipt of waste or before the effective date of the 
    requirements of this section (April 9, 1997), whichever is later, in 
    the case of closure and post-closure care, or no later than 120 days 
    after the corrective action remedy has been selected in accordance with 
    the requirements of Sec. 258.58.
    
    * * * * *
    
        4. Sec. 258.74 is amended by revising the third sentence of 
    paragraph (b)(1); by revising the second sentence of paragraph (c)(1); 
    and by revising the second sentence of paragraph (d)(1) to read as 
    follows:
    
    Sec. 258.74  Allowable mechanisms.
    
    * * * * *
    
        (b) * * *
    
        (1) * * * The bond must be effective before the initial receipt of 
    waste or before the effective date of the requirements of this section 
    (April 9, 1997), whichever is later, in the case of closure and post-
    closure care, or no later than 120 days after the corrective action 
    remedy has been selected in accordance with the requirements of 
    Sec. 258.58.* * *
    
    * * * * *
    
        (c) * * *
    
        (1) * * * The letter of credit must be effective before the initial 
    receipt of waste or before the effective date of the requirements of 
    this section (April 9, 1997), whichever is later, in the case of 
    closure and post-closure care, or no later than 120 days after the 
    corrective action remedy has been selected in accordance with the 
    requirements of Sec. 258.58. * * *
    
    * * * * *
    
        (d) * * *
    
        (1) * * * The insurance must be effective before the initial 
    receipt of waste or before the effective date of the requirements of 
    this section (April 9, 1997), whichever is later, in the case of 
    closure and post-closure care, or no later than 120 days after the 
    corrective action remedy has been selected in accordance with the 
    requirements of Sec. 258.58.* * *
    
    * * * * *
    
    [FR Doc. 95-8605 Filed 4-6-95; 8:45 am]
    
    BILLING CODE 6560-50-P
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
3/31/1995
Published:
04/07/1995
Department:
Environmental Protection Agency
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
95-8605
Dates:
The amendments in this final rule are effective March 31, 1995. The effective date of subpart G of part 258 (Secs. 258.70 through 258.74) which was added at 56 FR 51016 is delayed until April 9, 1997.
Pages:
17649-17652 (4 pages)
Docket Numbers:
FRL-5186-1
RINs:
2050-AE27
PDF File:
95-8605.pdf
CFR: (4)
40 CFR 258.58.*
40 CFR 258.1(f)(1)
40 CFR 258.70
40 CFR 258.74